In Lukas Dhont’s Close , the frame is not filled with dialogue, but with flax. A sea of blue flowers, swaying like a nervous heart. In that field, two boys, Léo and Rémi, run. They are thirteen. They are soldiers, lovers, brothers, and shadows of one another. They move in a choreography that knows no audience. When Léo falls, Rémi catches. When Rémi cries, Léo wipes.
And then the rupture. The unthinkable. Rémi, unable to breathe in the vacuum Léo has created, disappears from the world. Not with a note. Not with a cry. Just an absence so loud that it warps the air.
Close is not a film about death. It is a film about the death of closeness. And how, once broken, some fields can never be un-plowed.
The tragedy of Close is not the event itself—it is the space before the event. It is the slow poison of a single question asked at a school cafeteria: “Are you two together?” Not malice. Just a whisper. But a whisper, when dropped into the silence of boyhood, becomes a shard of glass. Movie Close 2022
In the end, Close is a film about the unbearable weight of tenderness between men. It asks: Why do we teach boys to break their own hearts before anyone else can? Why is softness a crime? Why is the field of blue flowers also a battlefield?
The field is still there. The flowers still bloom. But now, only one boy runs through them. And the silence runs with him.
Léo, the sunlit one, the athlete, hears the question and suddenly sees himself from the outside. He sees the intimacy of shared beds, of foreheads touching, of holding hands while running through the tulips. He does not have words for what he feels—only fear. So he does what boys are taught to do. He builds a wall. In Lukas Dhont’s Close , the frame is
What follows is not a mystery. It is a mourning. Léo does not weep at first. He plows the field. He lets the machinery of daily life grind him down, because stopping means feeling. And feeling means admitting that his protection—the wall—was the very weapon that killed.
They said the summer would last forever. It never does.
The film’s genius is its final act. There is no villain. No bully to blame. Just the horrifying realization that love, when denied, curdles into a force of destruction. Léo’s guilt is not for what he did, but for what he stopped doing. He stopped seeing Rémi. He stopped touching. He stopped saying: “I need you.” They are thirteen
But the world has a window. And it is watching.
He joins the hockey team. He stops walking home with Rémi. He laughs louder with other boys. He performs masculinity like a fever. And Rémi—soft, musical Rémi—watches his best friend become a stranger. The silence between them grows teeth.
We watch Léo, at last, break. He falls into his mother’s arms. The sound he makes is not a word. It is a wounded animal. And in that sound is every boy who was told to “man up.” Every friendship that died from a whisper. Every love that was never named.
Dhont films this not with melodrama, but with observation. The camera lingers on a door left ajar. On a single bike lying in the grass. On a bowl of soup going cold. These are not props. They are gravestones of connection.
© All right reserved 2026 | iSkills